Bush helicopter pilot to front reality TV star’s trial

At the hearing of Reality TV star Matt Wright, a jury will receive news from a shrub pilot who was the first time on a helicopter accident that killed Outback Wrangler’s common star Chris “Willow” Wilson.
Wright is being tried in the Supreme Court in Darwin with three points to try to mislead justice after the February 2022 accident in a remote part of Arnhem Land in the Northern Region.
The Crown case was worried that Wright did not properly record helicopter flight hours and Crash researchers reveal the problem and would trigger possible charges against him and his company.
The crown prosecutor Jason Gullaci said to the jury, the charges were not related to the cause of the accident and that Wright was not allegedly responsible for an accident or death.
When Mr. Wilson dived to the ground, kills him, and critically injured the pilot Sebastian Robinson, who is currently paraplegic, he is a suspension under the helicopter.
On Friday, the jury will receive news from the Bush helicopter pilot Michael Burbidge, who came to the accident scene in a Paperbark swamp after the contact with Mr. Robinson’s helicopter was lost.
Wright flew to the scene with Neil Mellon Neil Mellon.
Mr. Mellon said that on Thursday, a pistol to the jury and the phone from the body of Mr. Wilson, and he would put Darwin in a body bag for transportation by Careflight Chopper at the scene.
The jury heard a legal statement to the police after the accident by Wright and said the crocodile egg collection using helicopters was “natural risks”.
However, Helibrook said that he continued to work with Civil Aviation Safety Authority to minimize the risk and make it as safe as possible.
“Usually dangerous crocodiles, gelisi collectors said to the crocodile nests to collect the eggs.
“Children see it as a fun adventurous day, as well as a serious operation we do.”
In his legal statement, Wright said he had no problem in publishing maintenance documents to aviation security officials.
Everyone who entered the scene of the accident and the body covered with a linoleum Mr. Wilson’ın loss of “quite good shell shock” he said.
Royal prosecutor Jason Gullaci said that the jury Wright could not release the air to the aviation authorities that the collapsed helicopter could not be released and a partner ordered a “only torch”.
Wright’s helicopter, where Wright visited Mr. Robinson at the Royal Brisbane Hospital and refused to do it, was the “harsh word” to falsify the flight hours.
However, Defense Senior Advisor David Edwardson KC said that his client told Mr Robinson to falsify his flight recordings or find a partner to find and destroy a maintenance version.
The Darwin case is expected to take up to five weeks before playing games for Justice Allan Blow.


